Difference between revisions of "2011 ACF Nationals"
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− | The '''2011 ACF Nationals''' tournament was held at the University of Pittsburgh in the memorable Cathedral of Learning. [[Yale]] ([[John Lawrence]], [[Matt Jackson]], [[Kevin Koai]], [[Sam Spaulding]]) defeated the [[University of Minnesota]] ([[Andrew Hart]], [[Rob Carson]], [[Gautam Kandlikar]], [[Mike Cheyne]]) in a one-game final. [[Illinois]] took third. | + | {{Tourneybox|Tournament Name = 2011 [[ACF Nationals]] |
+ | |champion = [[Yale]] A | ||
+ | |second = [[Minnesota]] A | ||
+ | |third = [[Illinois]] A | ||
+ | |fourth = | ||
+ | |scorer = [[Matt Bollinger]], [[Virginia]] | ||
+ | |editors = [[Jerry Vinokurov]], [[Susan Ferrari]], [[Jonathan Magin]] | ||
+ | |site = [[Pitt]] | ||
+ | |field = 28 teams | ||
+ | |stats = https://hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/1456/ }} | ||
+ | |||
+ | The '''2011 ACF Nationals''' tournament was held on April 16 and April 17 at the [[Pitt|University of Pittsburgh]] in the memorable Cathedral of Learning. [[Yale]] ([[John Lawrence]], [[Matt Jackson]], [[Kevin Koai]], [[Sam Spaulding]]) defeated the [[University of Minnesota]] ([[Andrew Hart]], [[Rob Carson]], [[Gautam Kandlikar]], [[Mike Cheyne]]) in a one-game final. [[Illinois]] took third. | ||
The University of Michigan won the undergraduate title. It is somewhat muddled as to who won the DII title--it was either [[State College]] High School or [[Rice]] University. | The University of Michigan won the undergraduate title. It is somewhat muddled as to who won the DII title--it was either [[State College]] High School or [[Rice]] University. | ||
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==Stats== | ==Stats== | ||
Stats for the first two phases of the tournament, albeit with a disappearing [[VCU]], can be found [http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/1456/ here.] (Stats for the final "superplayoff" phase, in which the top eight teams in the Playoffs had their records wiped again and played a seven-team round robin amongst themselves, have been lost to eternity, and the current whereabouts of the statkeeper for the tournament, a certain "Brian Sisco" of the [[Pitt]] team, are unknown.) | Stats for the first two phases of the tournament, albeit with a disappearing [[VCU]], can be found [http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/1456/ here.] (Stats for the final "superplayoff" phase, in which the top eight teams in the Playoffs had their records wiped again and played a seven-team round robin amongst themselves, have been lost to eternity, and the current whereabouts of the statkeeper for the tournament, a certain "Brian Sisco" of the [[Pitt]] team, are unknown.) | ||
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{{Navbox ACF Nationals}} | {{Navbox ACF Nationals}} | ||
− | |||
[[Category:National championships]] | [[Category:National championships]] | ||
+ | {{c|2011 Tournaments}} |
Latest revision as of 23:43, 7 April 2021
2011 ACF Nationals | |
---|---|
Edited by | Jerry Vinokurov, Susan Ferrari, Jonathan Magin |
Champion | Yale A |
Runner-up | Minnesota A |
Third | Illinois A |
High scorer | Matt Bollinger, Virginia |
Site | Pitt |
Field | 28 teams |
Stats | https://hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/1456/ |
The 2011 ACF Nationals tournament was held on April 16 and April 17 at the University of Pittsburgh in the memorable Cathedral of Learning. Yale (John Lawrence, Matt Jackson, Kevin Koai, Sam Spaulding) defeated the University of Minnesota (Andrew Hart, Rob Carson, Gautam Kandlikar, Mike Cheyne) in a one-game final. Illinois took third.
The University of Michigan won the undergraduate title. It is somewhat muddled as to who won the DII title--it was either State College High School or Rice University.
The tournament proved to be extremely difficult and no team escaped any round unscathed. Both Yale and Minnesota, in the finals, were playing with two losses suffered during the final "superplayoffs" round (in fact, having both lost to Michigan). Minnesota defeated Illinois in a de facto elimination game in the final round of the playoffs to square off against Yale.
Editors
This tournament was edited by Jerry Vinokurov, Susan Ferrari, and Jonathan Magin. They produced an astonishing 24 packets.
Stats
Stats for the first two phases of the tournament, albeit with a disappearing VCU, can be found here. (Stats for the final "superplayoff" phase, in which the top eight teams in the Playoffs had their records wiped again and played a seven-team round robin amongst themselves, have been lost to eternity, and the current whereabouts of the statkeeper for the tournament, a certain "Brian Sisco" of the Pitt team, are unknown.)
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